After a video surfaced of members using slurs to define minority groups as part of their “new member process” a chapter of engineering fraternity Theta Tau at Syracuse University was permanently expelled from the school this weekend. But The Washington Post reports a second video appears to show fraternity members of the Theta Tau chapter mimicking the sexual assault of a disabled person that the Daily Orange obtained from a secret Facebook group. In it, one fraternity member sits in a wheelchair wearing a helmet while another forces him to perform mock oral sex. It appears to show other fraternity members perform the role of passive bystanders, egging them both on.

Chancellor Kent Syverud said in a statement that this second video goes against all “Syracuse University holds dear about diversity and inclusion of people with disabilities.” He also noted there are other videos that have not been made public and that the school’s response has been limited because “we do not reveal evidence in an ongoing potential criminal and judicial investigation so as not to prejudice that investigation and so as not to enable those being investigated to escape responsibility for all of their actions.” The text accompanying Syverud’s video announcing the expulsion of the fraternity also indicates that “steps are also well underway to recommend charges against individual students involved in the disgusting video.”

On Friday, after the chapter was suspended following the release of the first video, the Tau Theta Tau chapter posted on their website that “it was a satirical sketch of an uneducated, racist, homophobic, misogynist, sexist, ableist and intolerant person,” meant to “roast” an active brother in the fraternity. In an effort to provide context, they wrote, “we would like to believe that the new members seen in the video laughing at the horrible things being said were not laughing in concurrence with these beliefs, but in fact the opposite—that racism, sexism and homophobia are so wrong that they are laughable. None of the satire was said or done in malice.”

In response to the videos, Diane Wiener, director of the campus’s disability cultural center, said in a statement, “Theta Tau’s video is not only a representation that demeans, dehumanizes and objectifies disabled people, it does so by utilizing toxic masculinity, homophobia, racism and other forms of systemic oppression and violence to accomplish its strategy, hiding behind the false narrative of ‘humor,’ and ‘boys will be boys.'”
And further, “Disabled people are not to be pitied; disability is not a devastation that needs to be cured and about which triumph and shame are the necessary or desired aims and outcomes,” she says. “Yes, some individuals are ashamed of their disabilities, and others would just rather live differently. Some people do not want to be known as disabled, or might prefer only to be called Joe, who happens to have a disability, but disability is not the entirety, let alone the center of Joe’s life.”

While Greek life is a source of comfort and support for certain students, for others, it can be emotionally and physically abusive — and even fatal. Teen Vogue has reached out to Syracuse University and will update this space once we hear back.

Related: How University of Michigan Students Are Fighting Racism on Campus